The program is looking to manage the responsibility and investment challenges facing open source code, which has seen considerable duress over the past year.
“Through slush funds, bribes, gifts, and graft, Ericsson conducted telecom business with the guiding principle that ‘money talks,’” said U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman.
"We are ashamed of our historical performance, but we confront the issues head on and we’re now investing significant resources to strengthen our future compliance program,” CEO Börje Ekholm
The new security tool follows a slew of product upgrades and acquisitions as Google tries to wrestle cloud market share from Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure.
The offering features a hybrid and multi-cloud file backup tool that enables long-term retention with insight to store, protect, and manage unstructured data.
The vendor claims it competes against companies like Amazon, Cisco, and Oracle. It also directly competes against content delivery firms like Akamai, Limelight, and Fastly.
The cloud giant kicked off its inaugural re:Inforce security conference today and announced the general availability of two new services: Control Tower and Security Hub.
The vendor has reportedly reached deals to buy container security startup Twistlock for between $450 million and $500 million and another Israeli startup for an estimated $50 million to
CrowdStrike says revenue hit $249.8 million for fiscal 2019, and it says Amazon Web Services is running its security platform on “hundreds of thousands of AWS workstations and servers.”
The company seemed to be on the verge of a turnaround with its enterprise security business, but that came crashing down this week amid disappointing Q4 earnings, plunging stock
As the battle for the $10 billion JEDI contract narrows down to AWS and Microsoft Azure, Microsoft makes even more updates to its Government offerings.
The new release enables planning for “what-if” scenarios — things like determining the impact of adding hyperconverged infrastructure capacity or comparing the costs of moving workloads across different clouds.
The vendor has attempted to downplay concerns but admitted the investigation could result in "criminal or civil penalties, including the possibility of monetary fines."